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Dear Friends:
Exhale for a moment, forget your losses for the time being, and try to appreciate
the fact that you're living through the single most important development in
global finance since Bretton Woods. This is a "tell the grandkids about it" moment,
when governments all around the world have essentially decided in unison that
it's time to rewrite the rules, the very framework, in which financial transactions
take place. Stock trading, interbank lending, commercial paper, the very concept
of private sector ownership are all up in the air right now.
The only thing I can tell you with certainty is that if you try to evaluate
your investments using the same metrics you've always relied on - P/E ratios,
market share, interest rates, etc. - you're going to be as successful as a
football-turned-baseball coach evaluating a pitcher by the number of touchdowns
he throws. The rules are changing, gentle reader, changing at least for awhile
from market-driven inputs to government-driven inputs. If you try to apply
what you know from the "old game" without understanding that you're playing
a "new game," the rules might not make sense.
I'm sending you today a piece from my friend George Friedman on how his company
Stratfor looks at economics. More precisely, this piece explains how they look
at Political Economy. And from here on out, it's political economy that's going
to be driving markets. If the old rule was "Never fight the Fed." It's now, "Never
fight the Fed. And the Treasury. And the ECB. And the Bank of England. And
the Bank of Japan...." You get my point.
George has very kindly arranged for a special offer on a Stratfor Membership
for my readers. I strongly encourage you to click
here to take advantage of this offer. Now more than ever, you need the
kinds of insights that you can't get from traditional finance sources. You
need a wider lens, and there's no one better than George and his team at Stratfor
at this kind of analysis. I know you'll find them as valuable as I do.
Your Taking-It-All-In Analyst,
John Mauldin

The International Economic Crisis and Stratfor's Methodology
By George Friedman
Stratfor's focus is on geopolitics. That means that it focuses on the behavior
of human societies organized into complex, geographically defined systems.
In our time, that means that we study nation-states. In order to understand
the behavior of nation-states, it is necessary to focus on three major dimensions:
economics, war and politics. The nation has to be studied in terms of producing
wealth, defending (and stealing) wealth, and the internal and external relations
by which humans shape their lives.
Economics, war and politics are not separate spheres. They are a single entity
together constituting the reality of the nation-state. There are those who
argue that economic life should be left alone, not interfered with by political
or military power. We won't engage in that argument. What we know, empirically,
is that political and military power constantly impinge on economic life, and
vice versa. It is impossible to imagine war without taking into account politics
and economics. It is impossible to think of domestic or foreign policy without
considering economic and military issues. By the same token, it is also impossible
to think about economics without thinking about military and political matters.
If it can be made otherwise, then someone will do so and then we will change
our opinion. Until then, we cannot think of the free market as a meaningful
independent reality. It is always shaped by other factors. Perhaps it should
be otherwise. It isn't.
An integrated approach to social reality requires that these distinctions,
so important in the organization of a university or a newspaper, be overcome.
They were created in order to organize human activities into manageable pieces.
Our argument is that in so doing, reality is only apparently made more manageable,
and in fact is falsified. The standard approach to these issues creates distinctions
that don't exist and complexities that conceal rather than reveal the nature
of the problem at hand. A general who tries to wage war without consideration
of political ends and economic means is going to fail. An economist who tries
to understand and predict the behavior of the economy without a comprehensive
understanding of the political and military realities which shape the economy
will not do particularly well.
Geopolitics is in one sense also an abstraction, but it has the virtue of
not creating artificial distinctions. The price that the geopolitician pays
for a comprehensive view of reality is a forced simplification: there is just
too much happening to state it comprehensively. Geopolitics is the search for
the center of gravity of reality, those overwhelming forces that drive the
system in the direction it is going to take. These forces are never solely
political, military or economic in nature. Usually, they are in plain sight
and are overlooked because, being simple, they appear insufficient. Indeed,
they may be insufficient, but others can add the details. Our goal is to lay
bare the essentials and identify the general direction in which things are
moving.
Take, for example, our recent analysis of the Russo-Georgian war. It derived
from this central reality: Russia by the 19th century had achieved the borders
essentially held by the Soviet Union. In 1992 it had collapsed to a position
in which it had not been since perhaps the 17th century. That condition was
untenable. Either Russia would implode or it would reassert itself fairly quickly.
By early 2000s, it was our view that it would choose to assert itself. When
the United States tried to make an ally of Ukraine, which Russia sees as crucial
for its economic, military and political well-being, we became certain that
Russia would push back. As the Americans got bogged down in Iraq and Afghanistan,
a window of opportunity opened up and the Russians began the process of reassertion.
There are, obviously, endless things left out of this analysis. People of
every discipline could rip it apart as being insufficiently sophisticated.
In one sense they would be right. By avoiding the complexity of sophistication,
we could see the fundamental shape of things -- which was that the Russian
collapse, if halted, would have to reverse itself for economic, military and
political reasons. There were obviously many details we could not predict and
some we didn't know. But we captured the essential geopolitical condition of
Russia in order to understand what it had to do. We left it to others to do
the important work of mapping the complexity. Our task was to capture the simplicity.
In our analysis of the current financial crisis in the United States -- and
the world as a whole -- we have sought the center of gravity of the problem.
We approached that simply by asking one question: is what is going on simply
another inflection point in the business cycles that have occurred since World
War II, or does it represent a systemic failure such as that which happened
during the Great Depression? This struck us as the urgent issue.
We noted that in the Great Depression, the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP)
contracted by nearly 50 percent over three years. It was an unprecedented calamity.
Bearing this in mind, we compared the current situation to other events since
World War II to see if there was a framework for measuring it. We found that
framework in the Savings and Loan crisis of 1989, when an entire sector of
the U.S. financial system collapsed and the federal government intervened --
essentially guaranteeing or purchasing commercial real estate, whose price
decline had triggered the crisis. We noted that the total amount allocated
by the federal government in that crisis was about 6.5 percent of the GDP (and
the amount actually spent, before recouping of costs via sales, was less than
3 percent). We noted also that in the current crisis another sector of the
financial system -- the investment banks -- were devastated, and that the federal
government intervened, this time at about 5 percent of GDP. Meanwhile, the
equity markets had not declined as much as they did in 2000-2001, and as of
the second quarter of this year the economy was still growing by more than
2 percent. From this we concluded that the U.S. economy was moving into a recession
but that the recession would not break the framework of the postwar economy,
although clearly the degree of government intervention will reshape the financial
markets.
From the point of view of many Russian experts in 2001, our analysis of the
future of Russia was seen as simplistic and naïve. From the standpoint
of professional economists and traders in the markets, the same is being said
of our current analysis. But just as our critics among Russian experts failed
to see the main thrust of Russian history, many economists fail to see the
main thrust of what is now happening. The United States is a $14 trillion economy
with a potential problem amounting to $1-2 trillion (and probably far less
than that). If the government intervenes, it will create inequities and imbalances
in the system. But between the size of the economy and the government printing
press, the problem will be managed -- particularly because there are underlying
assets -- houses -- that can be monetized in the long run. The gridlock in
the financial system will undoubtedly create a recession, but there hasn't
been one for seven years and it's high time.
One can like or dislike the outcome, and we certainly agree that this will
cause long-term dislocations and imbalances. But we also know that America
as a nation-state has the resources to manage its way through this crisis if
the government intervenes. And that intervention is as hard-wired into the
American political-economic-military system as the law of supply and demand.
We do not speak the language of economics. There are numerous economists who
can do that. And we certainly don't speak the language of the financial markets.
We speak our own language, designed to reveal the elegant essence of the problem
rather than its enormous complexity. Certainly, if our analysis is wrong because
we failed to identify a crucial problem, then we haven't identified the center
of gravity properly. And we will be wrong, which is far worse. But as in February
2000, when we published a piece called "Recession Time?" which forecast the
market collapse that happened a few weeks later and the recession that followed
it, we will be criticized for not understanding some essential point -- in
2000 it was that we had no understanding of the impact of increased productivity
on the business cycle. They were right. We didn't understand it and we were
right not to. The complexities of productivity did not trump the obvious, which
was that the NASDAQ had reached unsupportable levels and there had been no
recession in nine years and that was way too long.
So, too, we are criticized for our failure to understand the spread between
T-Bills and LIBOR or myriad other things. But we do understand this: The political
reality is that the size of the American economy, deployed by the state, trumps
the financial problems created by the fall of the housing markets. It will
be ugly and painful for some and there will be a recession, but things are
always ugly and painful when there is a recession.
This series is about the economic problem, therefore, but is not written about
the economy and certainly not by economists. Their work is valuable but it
differs from ours. Rather this is about geopolitics and therefore about the
different regions and nation-states of the world. It is a geopolitical analysis
subsuming economics, politics and military affairs in a single system. And
it is designed to extract the obvious rather than drill into the complexity.
We hope this series has some value to our readers in clarifying the current
moment. That is its intention: to highlight the main tendency, not to detail
the complexity. Understanding the trees has value, but seeing the forest clearly
has value as well.
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John Mauldin
Frontlinethoughts.com
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